"In other suggestions that may prove controversial, the BMA’s guidance says:
Patients in ICU who do not improve or worsen after admission may have their treatment withdrawn under a new “capacity to benefit quickly” approach, and their place may be given to another patient thought likely to do better.
People working in vital services and industries such as the NHS, emergency services, utilities and telecoms may be deemed a priority for an ICU bed.
Patients with poor underlying health, such as a history of severe respiratory failure, are unlikely to go on to a ventilator or into ICU.
Rationing could become even tighter as the pandemic progresses, the document states. “Depending upon the nature of the pandemic, there may be a need during its progress to shift from one level of service rationing to a more or less severe one,”, it says."
Ventilators may be taken from stable patients for healthier ones, BMA says | Society | The Guardian
This gets better and better...
Patients in ICU who do not improve or worsen after admission may have their treatment withdrawn under a new “capacity to benefit quickly” approach, and their place may be given to another patient thought likely to do better.
People working in vital services and industries such as the NHS, emergency services, utilities and telecoms may be deemed a priority for an ICU bed.
Patients with poor underlying health, such as a history of severe respiratory failure, are unlikely to go on to a ventilator or into ICU.
Rationing could become even tighter as the pandemic progresses, the document states. “Depending upon the nature of the pandemic, there may be a need during its progress to shift from one level of service rationing to a more or less severe one,”, it says."
Ventilators may be taken from stable patients for healthier ones, BMA says | Society | The Guardian
This gets better and better...
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